Eсo Manufacturing proposes to make a thermostat similar in appearance to Honeywell’s well-known circular, convex model with a round dial. Honeywell’s model (which it calls “The Round”) is on the left, Eco’s on the right:
[[Image here]]
[[Image here]]
After receiving Honeywell’s demand that it cease and desist, Eco filed this action seeking a declaratory judgment that its product would not infringe Honeywell’s intellectual-property rights. Honeywell’s round thermostat formerly was protected by two patents — a utility patent (No. 2,394,920) that lasted between 1946 and 1963, and a design patent (No. D176,657) that expired in 1970. Honeywell then sought a trademark registration for the shape of this product. The Patent and Trademark Office denied that application, concluding that the shape is functional and thus cannot serve as a trademark.
In re Honeywell Inc.,
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Honeywell filed a counterclaim seeking equitable relief. This appeal is from the district court's order declining to issue a preliminary injunction that would block Eco from bringing its product to market.
Honeywell’s lead argument in this court is that it does not matter whether, or to what extent, the thermostat’s shape is functional. That is so, Honeywell submits, bеcause the trademark registration became incontestable in 1996, before Eco brought a competing product to market. Once a mark has been used for five years following registration, it becomes “incontestable”. 15 U.S.C. § 1065. Incontestability is “conclusive evidence of the validity of the registered mark and ... the registrant’s exclusive right” to use the mark in commerce. 15 U.S.C. § 1115(b). See
Park ’N Fly, Inc. v. Dollar Park and Fly, Inc.,
The words “incontestable” and “exclusive” sound more impressive than the legal rights that the Lanham Act actually conveys, however. Section 1065 says that even “incontestablе” marks must yield to prior users, and that the protection dissipates if the mark becomes generic. Moreover, and more to the point, § 1065 says that a claim based on an incontestable mark may be defeated “on a ground for which application to cancel may be filed at any time under paragraphs (3) and (5) of section 1064 of this title”. Section 1064(3) provides that a mark may be cancelled if it is, or becomes, functional. Thus incontestability does not avoid the question whether the thermostat’s round shape is functional.
As Honeywell sees things, hоwever, resort to the functionality proviso in § 1064(3) is anachronistic. Congress added that particular language to the Lanham Act in 1998, two years after registration
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No. 1,622,108 passed the five-year mark that made it incontestable. See § 201(b) of Pub. L. 105-330, 112 Stat. 3064 (effective Oct. 30, 1998). To apply a 1998 lаw to a mark that became incontestable in 1996 would be retroactive, Honeywell insists. New legislation is presumptively non-retroactive, see Landgraf v. USI Film Products,
This line of argument assumes that recognition of a functionality defense changed the law. Courts that had addressed the subject before 1998 were divided on the question whether functionality was a ground of cancellation despite its absence from the statutory text. Compare Aromatique, Inс. v. Gold Seal, Inc.,
A law is retroactive when it alters the legal consequences of completed acts. See Jahn v. 1-800-FLOWERS.com, Inc.,
Thus we arrive at the question whether the shape of Honeywell's thermostat is so clearly non-functional that the district judge abused his discretion by failing to enjoin Eco's competing model. We put the question this way becausе, on an appeal from the denial of interlocutory relief, appellate review is deferential. The district court was on solid ground to oh-serve that, after TrafFix,
[a] utility patent is strong evidence that the features therein claimed are functional. If trade dress protection is sought for those features the strong evidence of functionality based on the previous patent adds great weight to the statutory presumption that features are deemed functional until proved otherwise by the party seeking trade dress protectiоn. Where the expired patent claimed the features in question, one who seeks to establish trade dress protection must carry the heavy burden of showing that the feature is not functional, for instance by showing that it is merely an ornamental, incidental, or arbitrary aspeсt of the device.
This is not to say that it would be impossible for Honeywell to carry its burden. TrafFix gave “an ornamental, incidental, or arbitrary aspect of the device” as a for-instance, and not as an exclusive means to show non-functionality. The hood ornament on a Mercedes, or the four linked rings on an Audi’s grille, would exemplify “an ornamental, incidental, or arbitrary aspect of the device” that could survive as a trademark even if they once had been included within a patented part of the auto. Honeywell suggests a different way: Technological change. The transistor was not invented until 1947, the year after Honeywell’s utility patent issued. The innards of “The Round” were a complex electro-mechanical linkage. The circular casing and dial may have been related in a functional way to the operating parts. Today many thermostats are solid-state devices controlled by integrated circuits equivalent to thousands of transistors; Eco’s model even dispenses with mercury as an element of the temperature sensor. Thus what was once functional may half a century later be ornamental. Passage of time diminishes a utility patent’s significance. And there are plenty of other ways to package the necessary controls, as Honeywell reminds us with this illustration:
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Eco responds that “The Round” may be functional simply because some consumers prefer its look, and portions of the district court’s opinion imply agreement with this submission. Aesthetic appeal
can
be functional; often we value products for their looks. See
Qualitex,
It is not hard to think of three ways in which a round thermostat could be functional, at least in principle. First, rectangular objects may clash with other architectural or decorаtive choices. Just as a building designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe demands controls made from regular or semi-régular polyhedra, so a building designed by Frank Gehry could not tolerate boxy controls. Second, round thermostats (and other controls) may reduce injuries, especially to children, caused by running into protruding sharp corners. Third, people with arthritis or other disabilities may find it easier to set the temperature by turning a large dial (or the entire outer casing of the device) than by moving a slider or pushing buttons on boxes. The record does not contain much along any of these lines, but they are sufficiently plausible to disable Honeywell from prevailing at this preliminary stage, given the burden it bears as a result of the expired patents. Although the three possibilities we have mentioned do not show that roundness is “essential” to a thermostat, that’s nоt required.
TrafFix
rejected an equation of functionality with necessity; it is enough that the
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design be useful. The Justices told us that a feature is functional if it is essential to the design or it affects the article’s price or quality.
Thus the district court did not abuse its discretion in holding that Eco may go forward with a round thermostat — at its own risk, of course, should the decision come out otherwise on the merits. Although we have not endorsed all of the district court’s legal analysis, it would be pointless to remand for another hearing on interlocutory relief. The case should proceеd expeditiously to final decision; another “preliminary” round would waste everyone’s time. It would be especially inappropriate to direct the district judge to issue a preliminary injunction when issues other than functionality remain to be addressed. Eco contends, for example, that Honeywell bamboozled the Patent and Trademark Office when seeking registration during the 1980s, and material deceit would scotch this enforcement action whether or not the trade dress is functional. We do not express any view on that issue, or any ultimate view about functionality; it is enough to say that the record compiled to date adequately supports the district judge’s interlocutory decision.
Affirmed
